Monday, October 01, 2012

Adamski’s aliens in Brazil, eons ago?

Copyright 2012, InterAmerica, Inc.

My friend and colleague, Spanish researcher Jose Antonio
Caravaca, saw my posting about alien scribblings and provided addenda about the
controversial findings of noted archeologist Marcel Homet, who some have claimed, discovered, in the cavern known as Pedra Pintada
in the Amazon River basin near the town of Monte Alegre in northern
Brazil, images that duplicated, exactly, those provided by George Adamski's flying saucer visitors in the 1950s

Archeologist Homet provided images from the cavern that allegedly were the very same as the images that Adamski’s Venusian alien left in a shoe print
on a desert floor in 1952 and also inserted on a roll of film, replacing a
photo on that roll:

Googling Pedra Pintada will show a display of pictographs
and images from the cavern in question, none that match exactly what Professor
Homet allegedly gathered for presentation in 1962 and used as verification of the
Adamski extraterrestrial “messages” – implying that Adamski’s aliens were
regular visitors who left messages -- the same messages – in places as desolate
and obscure as the Pedra Pintada cavern.

Here are some legitimate images found in the Brazilian
mountainous cave:

Here are images that Professor Homet purportedly found that were compared to
the Adamski drawings, which had been publicized ten years earlier in Adamski’s book
Flying Saucers Have Landed:

Jose writes that the researcherMarc Halletsays Homet read"Flying Saucers Have
Landed"before
publishing his own book, Sons of the Sun, but Hallet found no evidence of
deceit.

In my
research I could not find the "group of symbols" in the "pedra
pintada" ... Apparently nobody knows the location of such symbols I talked
once with my friend Pablo Villarrubia (BrazilianHispanic) who said he knew nothing of the incident.

Homet in his book does not mention Adamski. Neither does he publish the Adamski drawings.

Homet in his book, Sons of the Sun, cites the symbols (which after researchers discovered and compared with Adamski), but does not say exactly where it is. Although the photo caption linked these symbols with drawings in Pedra Pintada. In the text of the book there are not references to these symbols.

This
statue was included in Professor Homet’s book, but the “alien
drawings” were not included.

Does it seem reasonable that Adamski’s Venusian messages would be found,
verbatim, in a hidden cavern in Brazil – those alleged cavern images dating from a time eons
before Adamski’s alleged contacts?

8 Comments:

Remember the Arcturus Books monthly catalogues? In one of them (March 1985) I cut out some notes made by the editor Bob Girard regarding Adamski's glyphs and Marcel Homet.

It seems Homet visited these caves in Brazil during 1949-50 where he discovered the images and photographed them.

Adamski had apparently met Homet sometime later, acquired the images and presumably doctored them slightly before reproducing them in his 1953 book "FS Have Landed" as an example of 'Venusian writing'.

Homet's own book SONS OF THE SUN was I think, published c. 1962. There was also something in FLYING SAUCER REVIEW about this decades ago, but I don't have the details.

"images that Professor Homet purportedly found that were compared to the Adamski drawings, which had been publicized ten years earlier in Adamski’s book Flying Saucers Have Landed"A great deal of innuendo over writings that do not provide a large enough sample to decrypt even if they were legit. A very similar tale circumstantial in line with the rut of Roswell, so it is no surprise the old flexible I Beam mythos is entangled in this. So extraterrestrials came to Earth and wrote in caves? Then they returned with messages on the soles of their shoes to be found by the fellow who took Sears chicken coops and made them into "saucers". Did the alien have a size 50 shoe? The finely wrought symbols to be impressioned into the ground equates to having cookie cutters for clown shoes as footwear and what of the composition of the soil, was it perfectly compacted and not loose as to being more likely to leave an cookie cutter impression? Ugh..